Random832 <random...@fastmail.com>: > As for double-v, a quick search through /usr/share/dict/words reveals > "civvies", "divvy", "revved/revving", "savvy" and "skivvy", and > various conjugations thereof. All following, more or less, the rule of > using a double consonant after a short vowel in contexts where a > single consonant would suggest the preceding vowel was long.
The single/double consonant rule is indeed an ancient Germanic spelling principle. English makes several twists to the it: * "v" is never doubled ("shovel") * a final "v" receives a superfluous "e" ("love") * the final consonant of a single-syllable word is doubled only if the consonant is "k", "l" or "s" ("kick", "kill", "kiss") * "k" becomes "ck" when doubled ("lacking") * a final consonant is never doubled in a multisyllable word ("havoc", "shovel") * a final "k" of a multisyllable word becomes "c" ("magic") Marko -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list